Description of the Evolution of International Public Cancer Genome Projects and Related Databases
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Description
Genomic research has fundamentally altered our understanding of cancer biology over the past ten years, making it possible for large-scale studies of various cancer types to conduct in-depth analyses of mutations, copy number alterations, structural variants, gene expression, and DNA methylation profiles. Public databases that provide scientists all over the world with access to meticulously curated data have been extensively utilized as a tool for further hypothesis-driven research on a variety of aspects of cancer biology. Initiatives such as The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) and the International Cancer Genome Consortium (ICGC) have facilitated international collaborations for cancer genomic analyses. In parallel, some of these findings are being used to provide cancer patients with specific clinical advantages. The evolution of international public cancer genome projects and related databases, as well as their impact on general cancer research, are briefly discussed in this review.
During the early stages of tumor development, the cancer genome sequencing also revealed the frequent presence of catastrophic single events that affected clustered regions of the genome. Numerous clustered structural aberrations are produced during chromothripsis, which typically results in DNA Copy Number Alterations (CNA), such as the amplification of genes associated with cancer. The systematic description and identification of various types of genetic alterations (such as substitutions, indels, gene fusions, and CNAs) that lead to human cancer is one example of how genome sequencing efforts have contributed to improving our fundamental understanding of cancer. In addition, these projects investigated how DNA alterations in human cancer complement aberrations at the protein, transcriptional, and epigenetic levels that produce distinct functional effects. Analyses of microRNAs and long-non-coding RNAs (lncRNAs) in the epigenetic and transcriptional domains have improved our comprehension of the development of intricate regulatory networks in healthy tissues and the role that changes in these networks play in the development of cancer. A comprehensive analysis of cancer cells' functional biological pathways and the discovery of mutational signatures were made possible by the identification of this multitude of aberrations in the cancer genome. This gave researchers a better understanding of how these pathways might be acting in concert during the development of cancer.
How we classify and comprehend the early stages of tumor development may be profoundly affected by fundamental insights into the cellular origin of cancer and modifications of common biological pathways. In this regard, a better classification of cancer has been proposed as a result of the discovery of tumors from distinct anatomical sites that share common genomic alterations. These tumors are biologically more similar to one another than tumors from the same tissue but do not share common genetic aberrations. Tumors may be better divided into biological and clinical entities if they have specific genomic alterations. Gene silencing, overexpression, the presence of fusion transcripts, and aberrations in alternative splicing are just some of the RNA alterations that have been associated with human cancer. In 1,188 cases, the TCGA and ICGC/PCAWG projects included paired genome and RNA sequencing in addition to DNA sequencing.
Warm Regards,
Deepika.k
Journal coordinator
Journal of British Biomedical Bulletin